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Should Countries Promote Bank 0r Market Based Financial Systems? Why, When and How? Michael Fuchs, Adviser, Finance & Private Sector Development, Africa Region, The World Bank
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Is Optimal Financial Structure a Useful Concept? Bank-based versus market-based a dubious dichotomy – more multidimensional approach required Economies of scale: Most smaller developing economy financial systems cant achieve economies of scale required for sustainable market-based finance (high regulatory & infrastructure costs, high entry costs, weak pricing information) Narrow view of financial services: In LICs demand for payments and savings products overshadows demand for credit: Key question becomes optimal financial infrastructure No uniform bank-based model: foreign vs local; small vs big banks; diversification vs concentration; banks vs telcos etc.
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What are impediments to achieving optimal (or at least better) financial structures in LDCs? Serious information asymmetries – lack of reliable enterprise (and bank) accounting and disclosure, weak credit histories and property registration, weak legal/judicial enforcement, expensive market infrastructure, reluctance to take on maturity risk etc. In Africa: Lack of scalable banking relationships; 50% of African population has neither formal nor informal access Banks are prime movers in addressing these asymmetries, but very varied appetite depending on market structure: – Size matters – oligopolistic competition versus grass-routes banking (SA versus Kenya) – Ownership (foreign/domestic) and familiarity with tailored bank products/techniques may matter – Access to term-funding Market-based systems have great difficulty in adjusting to go down market, e.g. in providing SMEs with access to finance – more so in the absence of a big brother market
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What are impediments to achieving optimal (or at least better) financial structures in LDCs? Industrial organization challenges: – Lack of willingness by authorities to tackle crucial public policy issues, such as redundancy in provision of parallel infrastructures to service the financials sector: Switches, ATMs, POSs – Unwillingness to encourage competition between the established sector and new entrants be they specialized providers (MFIs, NBFIs etc.) or telcos Crowding out by governments – government debt is still the lazy cushion for bank earnings Weak incentive to innovate by banks in the provision of SME and rural finance – risk aversion coupled with unfamiliarity with this market place
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What do current financial structures look like in Africa and how will they evolve? Current structures: – Predominantly bank-based with increasing foreign ownership (regional South-South investment) – Constrained efficiency: high cost, highly capitalized and high returns – Pockets of innovation Capturing informal payments (M-Pesa) Tailored banking products (Equity Bank) Innovative finance for formal SMEs (SA)
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The financial sector has achieved significant growth over the past decade, led by growth in bank assets and loans
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Stock market development has followed an uneven trajectory, with the post-crisis growth mainly driven by short term foreign capital; absence of long term domestic investors remains a significant constraint
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What do current financial structures look like in Africa and how will they evolve? Future trajectory: – Greater (sub) regional integration achieving some economies of scale, but also resource reallocation (and resistance) – Stronger competition from technology, but resistance from banks if not under their auspices – this applies to m-money, credit information (incl. supplier credit), identifiers, (movable) property registries etc. – Response to pressures to improve credit services for SMEs and rural economy, but may need encouragement (infant industry argument)
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